From: Portrait and Biographical record of Rockland and Orange Counties,
New York
By: Chapman Publishing Company
Published: 1895

ULYSSES S. GRANT, the eighteenth President of the United States, was born on the 29th of April, 1822, of Christian
parents, in a humble home at Point Pleasant, on the banks of the Ohio. Shortly after, his father moved to Georgetown,
Brown County, Ohio. In this remote frontier hamlet, Ulysses received a commonschool education. At the age of seventeen,
in the year 1839, he entered the Military Academy at West Point. Here he was regarded as a solid, sensible young
man, of fair ability, and of sturdy, honest character. He took respectable rank as a scholar. In June, 1843, he
graduated about the middle in his class, and was sent as Lieutenant of Infantry to one of the distant military
posts in the Missouri Territory. Two years he passed in these dreary solitudes, watching the vagabond Indians.

The war with Mexico came. Lieut, Grant was sent with his regiment to Corpus Christi. His first battle was at Palo
Alto. There was no chance here for the exhibition of either skill or heroism, nor at Resaca de la Palma, his second
battle. At the battle of Monterey, his third engagement, it is said that he performed a signal service of daring
and skillful horsemanship.

At the close of the Mexican War, Capt. Grant returned with his regiment to New York, and was again sent to one
of the military posts on the frontier. The discovery of gold in California causing an immense tide of emigration
to flow to the Pacific shores, Capt. Grant was sent with a battalion to Ft. Dallas, in Oregon, for the protection
of the interests of the immigrants. But life was wearisome in those wilds, and he resigned his commission and returned
to the States. Having married, he entered upon the cultivation of a small farm near St. Louis, Mo., but having
little skill as a farmer, and finding his toil not remunerative, he turned to mercantile life, entering into the
leather business, with a younger brother at Galena, Ill. This was in the year 1860. As the tidings of the rebels
firing on Ft. Sumter reached the ears of Capt. Grant in his countingroom, be said: "Uncle Sam has educated
me for the army; though I have served him through one war, I do not feel that I have yet repaid the debt. I am
still ready to discharge my obligations. I shall therefore buckle on my sword and see Uncle Sam through this war
too."

He went into the streets, raised a company of volunteers, and led them as their Captain to Springfield, the capital
of the State, where their services were offered to Gov. Yates. The Governor, impressed by the zeal and straightforward
executive ability of Capt. Grant, gave him a desk in his office to assist in the volunteer organization that was
being formed in the State in behalf of the Government. On the 15th of June, 1861, Capt. Grant received a commission
as Colonel of the Twenty-first Regiment of Illinois Volunteers. His merits as a West Point graduate, who had served
for fifteen years in the regular army, were such that he was soon promoted to the rank of Brigadier-General, and
was placed in command at Cairo. The rebels raised their banner at Paducah, near the mouth of the Tennessee River.
Scarcely had its folds appeared in the breeze ere Gen. Grant was there. The rebels fled, their banner fell, and
the Stars and Stripes were unfurled in its stead.

He entered the service with great determination and immediately began active duty. This was the beginning, and
until the surrender of Lee at Richmond he was ever pushing the enemy with great vigor and effectiveness. At Belmont,
a few days later, he surprised and routed the rebels, then at Ft. Henry won another victory. Then came the brilliant
fight at Ft. Donelsoii. The nation was electrified by the victory, and the brave leader of the boys in blue was
immediately made a Major-General, and the military district of Tennessee was assigned to him.

Like all great captains, Gen. Grant knew well how to secure the results of victory. He immediately pushed on to
the enemies' lines. Then came the terrible battles of Pittsburg Landing, Corinth, and the siege of Vicksburg, where
Gen. Pemberton made an unconditional surrender of the city with over thirty thousand men and one hundred and seventy-two
cannon. The fall of Vicksburg was by far the most severe blow which the rebels had thus far encountered, and opened
up the Mississippi from Cairo to the Gulf.

Gen. Grant was next ordered to co-operate with Gen. Banks in a movement upon Texas, and proceeded to New Orleans,
where he was thrown from his horse, and received severe injuries, from which he was laid up for months. He then
rushed to the aid of Gens. Rosecrans and Thomas at Chattanooga, and by a wonderful series of strategic and technical
measures put the Union army in fighting condition. Then followed the bloody battles at Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain
and Missionary Ridge, in which the rebels were routed with great loss. This won for him unbounded praise in the
North. On the 4th of February, 1864, Congress revived the grade of lieutenant-general, and the rank was conferred
on Gen. Grant. He repaired to Washington to receive his credentials and enter upon the duties of his new office.

Gen. Grant decided as soon as he took charge of the army to concentrate the widely-dispersed National troops for
an attack upon Richmond, the nominal capital of the rebellion, and endeavor there to destroy the rebel armies which
would be promptly assembled from all quarters for its defense. The whole continent seemed to tremble under the
tramp of these majestic armies, rushing to the decisive battle-field. Steamers were crowded with troops. Railway
trains were burdened with closely-packed thousands. His plans were comprehensive, and involved a series of campaigns,
which were executed with remarkable energy and ability, and were consummated at the surrender of Lee, April 9,
1865.

The war was ended. The Union was saved. The almost unanimous voice of the nation declared Gen. Grant to be the
most prominent instrument in its salvation. The eminent services he had thus rendered the country brought him conspicuously
forward as the Republican candidate for the Presidential chair.

At the Republican Convention held at Chicago, May 21, 1868, he was unanimously nominated for the Presidency and
at the autumn election received a majority of the popular vote, and two hundred and fourteen out of two hundred
and ninety-four electoral votes.

The National Convention of the Republican party, which met at Philadelphia on the 5th of June, 1872, placed Gen.
Grant in nomination for a second term by a unanimous vote. The selection was emphatically indorsed by the people
five nionths later, two hundred and ninety-two electoral votes being cast for him.

Soon after the close of his second term, Gen. Grant started upon his famous trip around the world. He visited almost
every country of the civilized world, and was everywhere received with such ovations and demonstrations of respect
and honor, private as well as public and official, as were never before bestowed upon any citizen of the United
States.

He was the most prominent candidate before the Republican National Convention in 1880 for a renomination for President.
He went to New York and embarked in the brokerage business under the firm name of Grant & Ward. The latter
proved a villain, wrecked Grant's fortune, and for larceny was sent to the penitentiary. The General was attacked
with cancer in the throat, but suffered in his stoic-like manner, never complaining. He was re-instated as General
of the Army, and retired by Congress. The cancer soon finished its deadly work, and July 23, 1885, the nation weflt
in mourning over the death of the illustrious General.

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